<p>Sorry, say whatever you like, I'll do it and recommend the way I like it, not how you like it. You can compile a separate answer to the questioner and recommend your verbose, instead of recommending me your best practices.<br>
</p>
<p>Zeeshan A Zakaria</p>
<p>--<br>
Sent from my Android phone with K-9 Mail.</p>
<p><blockquote type="cite">On 2010-06-03 2:31 PM, "Steve Edwards" <<a href="http://asterisk.org">asterisk.org</a>@<a href="http://sedwards.com">sedwards.com</a>> wrote:<br><br>Un-top-posting...<br>
<p><font color="#500050"><br>On Thu, 3 Jun 2010, Zeeshan Zakaria wrote:<br></font></p><p><font color="#500050">> Its your personal opinion. Actually as a non-native-English speaker to <br>> me "Noop" sounds much be...</font></p>
Hmmm. "newp" sounds better than "verbose?" If you were a complete "noob,"<br>
which one would you guess outputs cruft to the cli? How many applications<br>
have a "--noop" command line parameter? If an application had a "--noop"<br>
what would you guess it did?<br>
<br>
Historically (at least as far back as I can remember), NO-OP is an<br>
assembly language construct used as a "placeholder" and does "no<br>
operation."<br>
<br>
Verbose() (which existed at least as far back as 1.2 and thus works with<br>
any version you are likely to run across) provides more functionality and<br>
is more explicit. Try it -- the "next guy" will thank you.<br>
<br>
I also fight windmills in my spare time :)<br>
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--<br>
</font><p><font color="#500050">Thanks in advance,<br>-------------------------------------------------------------------------<br>Steve E...</font></p><p><font color="#500050">-- Bandwidth and Colocation Provided by <a href="http://www.api-digital.com">http://www.api-digital.com</a> --<br>
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